Mom Seen on Camera Scolding Son During Baltimore Protests Tells Obama 'It Is So Hard' to Keep Children 'Out of Harm's Way'

Toya Graham was captured on camera in 2015 disciplining her son.

ByABC News
July 14, 2016, 8:34 PM

— -- The Baltimore single mom who was captured on camera striking and yelling at her son as he participated in violent demonstrations during the April 2015 Freddie Gray protests asked President Obama today for his advice as she continued to attempt to steer not only her son, but her five daughters as well, in the right direction.

Toya Graham, 44, who attended today’s town hall with her son, Michael, said that although she had sent him away because of her own fears for his life, but he has been returning to the neighborhood on weekends.

"So he's right back in the heart of everything," she said during a town hall with the president hosted by ABC News' David Muir. In 2015, Graham said she spotted Michael tossing rocks at police while she was watching TV. Cameras caught her yelling at and grabbing and hitting him.

"It is so hard to keep them out of harm's way when you're trying to, you know, keep a job and do right," said Graham, 44. "What I do understand is the rage that a lot of these [young people] are going through in Baltimore City. I've seen a lot. ... Whether it's with the police department and these young black men or just the men killing the men. ... I have to work as a single mother. What can I do?"

Obama spoke as part of a Disney Media Networks town hall titled "The President and the People: A National Conversation," which aired Thursday at 8 p.m. ET and was simulcast commercial-free on ABC, ESPN, Freeform, ABCNews.com, Freeform Digital, Watch ABC, Watch ESPN, Yahoo, ABC News’ Facebook page and YouTube channel as well as ABC Radio and ESPN Radio. Disney is the parent company of ABC News.

Obama, who was raised by a single mother, said that parents like Graham needed support in their communities to enforce what they were trying to teach at home.

"Part of that support is making sure that schools are safe. Part of that support is making sure that there are programs for your son and daughters after school because you may be working and you want to make sure that they are in some place that’s constructive and teaching them something and providing positive values," he said.

Obama said that a conversation needed to continue in the US about issues like early childhood education, high-quality daycare and after-school programs as well as making sure that schools had sports and music programs.

"There are a lot of schools now where there’s just not much there for kids," he said. "You need to have a community that is reinforcing the values that you're teaching and that provides you some basic support.

"There are heroic moms, single moms. ... But it's just easier if the society as a whole is trying to support and reinforce what parents are trying to do as well. ... They got to have support."

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